1: Ageing
2: Organizing geriatric services
3: Clinical assessment of older people
4: Rehabilitation
5: Falls and funny turns
6: Drugs
7: Neurology
8: Stroke
9: Psychiatry
10: Cardiovascular
11: Chest medicine
12: Gastroenterology
13: Renal medicine
14: Homeostasis
15: Endocrinology
16: Haematology
17: Musculoskeletal system
18: Pressure injuries
19: Genitourinary medicine
20: Incontinence
21: Ears
22: Eyes
23: Skin
24: Infection and immunity
25: Malignancy
26: Death and dying
27: Ethics
28: Finances
29: Peri-operative Medicine
Highly Commended in the Medicine category at the BMA Book Awards 2019
Dr Lesley Bowker qualified in 1990 from Southampton, completing
further training in Wessex (SHO and registrar jobs) and Oxford
(senior registrar) followed by a year in Perth, Australia as a
senior lecturer. She was a 'career geriatrician' from early days
and developed a research interest in practical clinical ethics
especially relating to the elderly. Her DM thesis (awarded from
Southampton in 2003) was in the practical and ethical issues
surrounding
life-sustaining treatment in the elderly person. Her consultant
appointment at Norwich in 2002 allows her to combine clinical work
with education as the clinical skills coordinator for the school of
medicine at UEA.
Dr Sarah Smith trained at St Mary's Hospital Medical School in
London, qualifying in 1994. She went on to do house jobs and an SHO
rotation at her training hospital, which is where she developed an
interest in geriatric medicine. After an ITU post in Brighton, she
joined the SpR training scheme for geriatrics and GIM in the Oxford
region, completing in 2003. After maternity leave, Dr Smith was
appointed as a part-time consultant in Community Geriatrics and GIM
for the Oxford Radcliffe
Hospitals. Her area of special interest is stroke.
The book gives a very good overview of the main and most common
areas of elderly care ... it has a really good, user-friendly
layout and covers a wide range of conditions in a simplified
way.
*BMA reviewing panel, BMA Medical Book Awards 2019*
... Packed with clinical tips and case examples to help put
knowledge into practice, [...] this comprehensive handbook is well
worth the investment and lends itself to being used in day-to-day
clinical practice.
*A Illsley, British Journal of Hospital Medicine*
This is an excellent book. It is succinct yet easy to read ...
there are useful little boxes of 'How To's e.g. How To Give Sub-Cut
Fluids, Use Digoxin, Assess Depression etc. I thought I know how to
do many of these tips but I still found then useful and
interesting. This is a useful book for anyone spending time looking
after old patients.
*BMA Medical Book Competition (from a review of the previous
edition)*
This is a thoughtful and challenging book that is very serious
reading for clinicians who frequently encounter elderly patients in
their practice.
*Doody's Notes, Dec 2012*
All physicians who treat older people must have geriatric
expertise. It goes without saying that internists, hospital doctors
and GPs need easy access to geriatric knowledge, but also surgeons,
neurologists, rheumatologists, and other specialists who encounter
older patients should know something about the special challenges
regarding elderly health and disease, clinical, ethical and
practical. The target group is therefore most hospital doctors and
all general practitioners sturdy, handheld book like this - along
with the online encyclopedia - provides flexible and customized
access to the knowledge, advice and guidance.
*Tidsskrift for Den norske legeforening, Feb 2013*
...this is a brilliantly crafted book and a wonderful contribution
to the field.
*Doody's Notes (from a review of the previous edition)*
This handbook leaves no stone unturned when it comes to geriatric
medicine. It provides in-depth information on a wide range of
topics, making it a one-stop reference for healthcare professionals
and caregivers ... What sets this handbook apart is its
practicality. It doesn't just provide clinical information; it
offers actionable advice on how to approach geriatric patients,
manage their conditions, and address their unique needs…The
well-organized structure, with clear headings and subheadings,
makes it easy to quickly locate the information you need [...]. In
summary, the Oxford Handbook of Geriatric Medicine is a powerhouse
of knowledge for those involved in the care of elderly individuals.
[...] I found it to be an indispensable reference for understanding
and addressing the unique healthcare needs of geriatric
patients.
*Amazon UK*
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